BAKU: `Zerkalo’: Hostility to Turks Runs in Armenians’ Blood

, Azerbaijan
Democratic Azerbaijan
Jan 27 2007

`Zerkalo’: Hostility to Turks Runs in Armenians’ Blood
27.01.2007

Former Turkish President, Suleyman Demirel, told so during exclusive
interview for APA.
– It is very likely that US Congress will adopt draft bill on
`genocide of Armenians’. How do you evaluate present situation?
– Armenians continue demonstrating hostility to Turkey and Turks all
over the world. In fact the main goal of Armenians of the world is
hostile attitude to Turks. They wash off the traces of their deeds.
Armenians killed over 50 Turkish diplomats and thousands people in
Nagorni Garabagh. Armenian armies haven’t been withdrawn from
occupied territories of Azerbaijan. Nobody sees it in the world. The
only event that world community notices is the one happened 90 years
ago in the course of World War I and engraved on the history.
Up today attempts of Armenians to accuse Turkey of `genocide of
Armenians’ failed in the US Congress. This time adoption of the draft
bill is expected. During recent elections held in USA, democrats won
majority of seats in the Congress. Even if such decision is taken I
think it will have no importance as it is impossible to enforce it.
It is social fight. I hope US President will prevent adoption of the
bill.
But even if in present situation President fails to prevent adoption
he is able to veto. Turkey got used to such things as our country
exists in the world owing to its own strength. We don’t want to be
enemies of world community. But we should stand our ground within the
fight against unjust. It is impossible to solve this issue in some
other way. In actual fact politicians want to do what history has to
do. Historical evaluations should be given to the events of 90 years
old. Unfortunately politicians take decision instead historians.
– Minister of Foreign Affairs of Turkey called `Armenian issue’ as
important one, threatening for Turkey. What threat is talked of?
– Creation of social hostility in global scale is considerable threat
for us. And how it harms Turkish interests is separate issue. Of
course Turkey has to stand it. We have no choice.
– Government made number of proposals to Armenia in connection with
genocide, but Armenians gave no positive answer. How do you evaluate
policy of `softening’ regarding Yerevan?
– They want to continue policy of slander that has been carried out
for years, but not to solve any problem. Even if someone realizes
their intensions Armenians will find new grounds and covers for
slander. Slander runs in their blood.
– How Turkey and Azerbaijan should consolidate their forces to fight
this policy of slander and occupation?
– Azerbaijan and Turkey have already consolidated their forces. We
can go on even having no friends but Azerbaijan, and Azerbaijan can
do the same. We are one nation living in two countries. We are always
together and continuing our way.

www.zerkalo.az

Shining the spotlight on interfaith cinema

DePaulina, IL
Jan 28 2007

Shining the spotlight on interfaith cinema

by Alexandra Klimczak
Staff Writer

The interfaith scholars present a new program that aims to attract
the film enthusiast, faith scholar, student and faculty member alike
with their carefully-chosen cinematic gems.

The DePaul Student Interfaith Council and student interfaith scholars
based in University Ministry introduced film screenings this quarter.
The Interfaith Film Society is part of the University Ministry’s
intefaith ministry program, which aims to "foster opportunites for
religious understanding, dialogue, and celebration among the
different faith communities on campus, and seeks to build a strong
intercollegiate network of interfaith leaders.
Taking place once each week, the film screenings provide an
opportunity for students to experience different cultures and eras
from multiple perspectives.

Meetings are held at 7 p.m. on Wednesdays. The films are screened on
the Lincoln Park campus in the Schmitt Academic Center, Room 254. The
next film screening and discussion will be held Jan. 31 and is on
Sergei Parajanov’s "Color of Pomegranates."

Sofiko Chiaureli stars in this production made in 1969 based on the
life of Armenian poet, Sayat Nova.

The closing film for the quarter will showcase an American director
that challenged many social norms of the early 1900s.
T.J. Bigbee, a senior religious studies student and an interfaith
scholar explained that the nature of meetings is to "bring together
people as a catalyst for dialogue." He refers to a fellow organizer
as being the passion

behind the project.

This coordinator, Hunter Seamons, a 2004 DePaul alumnus with
concentrations in acting and religious studies planned the
screenings. Seamons is now a graduate student at DePaul. The group
was started as a way to combine his passion for film and the
interfaith mission.
The new program introduces an expanded approach alongside the recent
initiative to promote interfaith discourse. After researching other
ministry activities, Seamons wanted to create a group that could
introduce art as a medium of faith discussion.

According to Seamons, "The films have been chosen to be powerful
experiences."
He explains that the screenings provide two opportunities for active
intercultural thought. This experience is not solely for the
religious, but rather can help anyone "explore through the eyes of
the other."
Although the current meetings have seen modest turnouts, the group
has the potential for consistent growth. The screenings utilize both
the filmmaker and the viewpoints of the present veiwers to build
knowledge and understanding of both differences and similarities.
The group’s mission to bring together people of diverse backgrounds
carries on through their work with other interfaith organizations,
including the interfaith ministries on campus.

These groups include the Niagara Foundation, which works to spread
diversity throughout the city and the Interfaith Youth Core.
The Interfaith Youth Core is an organization that "seeks to build a
movement that encourages religious young people to strengthen their
religious identites, foster inter-religious understanding and
cooperate to serve the common good," according to a link on the
Interfaith Film Society’s Web site.

The Interfaith Film Society’s future film screenings include "The
Wild Blue Yonder," which will be shown Feb. 7 in the Student Center,
2250 N. Sheffield Ave. Room 316; "The Gospel According to St.
Matthew," will be shown on Feb. 14. "Ikiru" will be shown on Feb. 21.
Charlie Chaplin’s 1920’s black and white silent classic "The Kid"
will cap the screenings for this quarter.

Events are open to all people. Discussion of the films presented is
open to students, faculty members, and anyone who wishes to pose new
perspectives to the group.
The Student Interfaith Scholars encourage open discussion and
questions concerning many of their programs.
The student interfaith scholars welcome any inquiry into the
interfaith initiative or questions concerning details of the
Interfaith Film Society.

More information about the Interfaith Film Society can be found on
the University Ministry Web site,
The Interfaith Film Society
also has a Facebook group.

25&sectid=2

http://www.thedepaulia.com/story.asp?artid
www.studentaffairs.depaul.edu/ministry.

ANKARA: Kamu-Sen: Blaming Trabzon is simplistic

New Anatolian, Turkey
Jan 26 2007

Kamu-Sen: Blaming Trabzon is simplistic

The New Anatolian / Ankara
26 January 2007

While Black Sea locals now stand accused of the premeditated murder
of a prominent journalist, a major union said yesterday it would be a
mistake to blame the violence associated with the region on
unemployment alone.

The Turkish Public Workers’ Labor Union (Kamu-Sen) said that the
effects of migration must also be considered an important factor.

Trabzon, a major city in the region, and the Black Sea region have
been at the focus of news stories since last year when Andrea
Santoro, a Catholic priest, was assassinated by a teenager in
Trabzon, and a crowd tried to lynch members of the Association of
Solidarity with the Families of Prisoners (TAYAD). Last week, most
recently, finally journalist Hrant Dink was murdered by a teenager
from Trabzon, according to accounts of his confession.

Kamu-Sen head Bircan Akyildiz said that he has been following news
stories anxiously and that it is wrong to present unemployment as the
sole factor behind Dink’s murder.

An OECD report released this week also said that Turkey has too many
young people at loose ends. In Turkey, the percentage of "inactive
youth" is 47.5 percent for women and around 25 percent for men.

Akyildiz underlined that unemployment is not a problem only in the
Black Sea region but it is a "bleeding wound" across the country. He
also explained that mass migration is another important factor
affecting the region.

Meanwhile, Turkish Employer Unions Association (TISK) Chair Tugrul
Kudatgobilik urged the government to solve Turkey’s unemployment
problem, stressing that more than 800,000 people in the country are
looking for a job.

Abdullah Gul: Article 301 is the domestic affair of Turkey

Abdullah Gul: Article 301 is the domestic affair of Turkey

ArmRadio.am
27.01.2007 14:01

In response to the corrections made by the European Union on the
amendment of Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code restricting the
freedom of speech, Turkish Vice-Premier and Foreign Minister Abdullah
Gul sent an address titled ` It is the domestic affair of Turkey’ to
EU leadership.

Turkish NTV informs that in the message Gul said that `the
recommendations of foreigners on such issues are understood
incorrectly inside Turkey.’

UEFA EURO 2008: Yerevan and Baku failed to reach agreement

PanARMENIAN.Net

UEFA EURO 2008: Yerevan and Baku failed to reach
agreement
26.01.2007 15:56 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Heads of the Armenian and Azeri
Football Federations discussed the possible venue of
matches of UEFA EURO 2008 qualifying games. The Azeri
delegation was led by President of the Association of
Football Federations of Azerbaijan Ramiz Mirzoyev and
Secretary General Fuad Asadov. President of the RA
Football Federation Ruben Hayrapetyan and Secretary
General Armen Minasyan headed the Armenian delegation.
However, the sides failed to come to agreement.

Head of the information department at the AFFA Mikail
Guliyev informed that the Azeri side has not changed
its stance and insists on holding matches in a third
country.

Armenia’s Football Federation reiterated favor of
holding both games in Yerevan and Baku respectively,
pledging full security for Azeris in Yerevan. The
meetings of the federation heads will be continued,
APA reports.

Dink murder: governor, chief of security of Trabzon dismissed

PanARMENIAN.Net

Dink murder: governor and chief of security department of Trabzon dismissed
26.01.2007 19:50 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Hrant Dink was shot dead January 19 outside his
office in Istanbul. 17-year-old Ogun Samast, one of six suspects,
pleaded guilty to the murder. Another suspect, Yasin Hayal, admitted
inciting to the assassination. He was earlier trained at a camp of
Chechen militants in Azerbaijan and headed a teenager ultranationalist
grouping in Trabzon.

1915-2007: Nothing much has changed, it seems

1915-2007: Nothing much has changed, it seems

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.01.2007 17:16 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Nothing much has changed, it seems. They were
killed both in 1915 and in 2007," Turkish writer and journalist
Ahmet Altan says in his "1915-2007" article, which was published in
"Gazetem.net" site just the other days. Independent French journalist
Jean Eckian retold the PanARMENIAN.Net corespondent Ahmet Altan’s
article.

"They killed us, and we killed them back. What are we going to say
about the murder of Hrant then? That "Hrant killed us, and we killed
Hrant back?" Now that is not what we say, is it? We say "traitors
killed Hrant." We do not see the murderers of Hrant as one of "us." Why
is it that "we" are the ones who ninety years ago killed hundreds
of thousands of people, without forsaking children, women, elderly
and babies, who decimated the Armenians, but we are not the ones who
killed Hrant? What is the difference between the two? The difference
is that this time we saw the murder, that we have an idea about the
intentions of the murderer. This time they did not "tell us" how the
murder was committed, we personally witnessed it ourselves. If those
who in this country "write" the history of 1915 had also written the
murder of Hrant, the children in this country would have said fifty
years later that "Hrant had killed us, and we killed Hrant back. The
truth would have changed shape in the hands of the liars."

We did not kill Hrant. Most probably some people who have ferreted
their way into the state had Hrant killed. Their intention was for
the world to react negatively to Turkey, which would have escalated
nationalism within the country in response, leading to a break off
from Europe. In 1915 as well, "we" did not kill the Armenians. Those
poor people were not killed by "the ones ferreted inside the state,"
but directly by the state itself. A great massacre that was organized
by the Unionists in government was actualized. The Armenians who
were killed were Ottoman subjects. They were a part of the Ottoman
nation. A part of the nation was utterly destroyed by the state.

"We" are the nation. The ones who were killed were a part of
"us." Since each Turk who lives in this country see themselves not
as a "part of the nation" but rather a "part of the state," however,
they also own this massacre executed by the state. "They killed us,
we killed them," they say. Now that is a lie. The Ottoman State, under
the government of the Unionists killed, in an organized manner, with
the planning of the intelligence unit entitled Special Organization
(Teskilat-? Mahsusa), a "part of us." The murdered Armenians are a
part of "us." It is actually our duty to ask them to account for that
murdered part of us.

"We" ought to face this state and ask them "are you a continuation
of the Ottoman state," ask them "why do you own up to the murder
committed by a state you destroyed," ask them "why don’t you yourself
seek accountability for this destruction by the state of a part
of its nation and instead leave this task to others. "Because "we"
did not ask this, one of "us," Hrant Dink, has now been murdered. On
top of it all, he, while still mourning for his ancestors, wanted
Turkey not to be trapped solely within the term "genocide," not to
have the entire debate forced into a single word; he wanted Turkey
to be permitted to become democratized through uniting with the world.

Hrant Dink was declared "an enemy of the Turks." He was no one’s enemy,
he was not someone who could have been a foe. He was a friend. And he
was a friend to everyone. Why is it that in this country those who are
"for murders and massacres" are accepted as a Turk while "those for
friendship, peace, justice and humanity" are regarded as foe. The
Turkish populace owns up to the crimes of the old and new "state"
because it cannot grasp that it is the "nation." As it cannot grasp
that it itself is the nation, it identifies itself with the murderers
instead and says "us." My heart could never bear to have the sorrowful
deaths of those hundreds of thousands of people, the bloody tragedy
that was experienced to be lost within the vortex created by the
term "genocide." Yet because we have not been able to move beyond
that word, people like Hrant are still being killed. I think that
now, in order to prevent new murders, in order to stop this country
from being dragged to a dead end, it is up to us to move beyond that
word. The Ottoman State killed hundreds of thousands of people solely
because they were "Armenians." And today a hidden force kills Hrant
for "being an Armenian." What are we going to call it if a person is
being killed solely because of their race or their religion? It is
up to "us," to this nation to ask for an accounting of those who were
killed. Hrant’s death hurts you all deeply. If you had witnessed what
had happened in 1915, you would have been likewise deeply hurt. And
you would not have said "they killed us, we killed them." You would
have been ashamed. Just as you wanted Hrant’s murderers to be found,
you would have wanted the murderers of those Armenians found as well.

With his death, Hrant made us remember that we are a nation, that we
should not identify ourselves with the murderers. Then let us do what
befits being a nation.

Who killed Hrant? Who killed the Armenians in 1915?

They do not have to account for their actions to "others," they have
to account to "us." For we are the ones who have died. The ones who
died are a part of us".

Istanbul funeral for slain editor

Istanbul funeral for slain editor

Journal of Turkish Weekly
Jan 24 2007

Wednesday , 24 January 2007

Thousands of people have gathered outside the Istanbul offices of
murdered Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink ahead of his funeral.

The newspaper editor, 52, was gunned down in the Turkish city on
Friday.

Mourners, dressed in black and carrying signs reading "We are all
Armenians", crammed the square outside the offices.

Thousands are expected to take part in the funeral march along a
five-mile (8km) route to an Armenian Orthodox Church amid tight
security.

Turkish prosecutors said the teenager suspected of shooting dead Dink
had confessed.

Ogun Samast was arrested after he was identified by his father from
CCTV images taken near the murder scene.

He was held in the Black Sea port of Samsun together with six other
suspects, before being returned to Istanbul for further questioning.

One of the suspects was named as Yasin Hayal, a friend of Samast,
who has spent 11 months in jail for a 2004 bomb attack outside a
McDonald’s restaurant in Trabzon.

Turkey’s Hurriyet newspaper reported on Monday that during police
questioning Hayal said that he had given Samast, aged 16 or 17,
the gun and the money.

Investigators say that so far they have found no links between Samast
and any known political group.

Dink was shot dead in broad daylight outside the office of his
newspaper, Agos. ———High security

Turkish officials have said the funeral will be held amid high police
presence.

"We have cancelled all leave for police and we will have an adequate
force in place," Istanbul governor Muammer Guler said on Monday.

Armenian government officials and religious leaders as well as some
members of Turkey’s Armenian Diaspora have been invited to attend
the funeral.

Officials from Yerevan will make the trip despite the fact that
Armenia and Turkey have no diplomatic relations.

Dink will be buried at Istanbul’s Armenian cemetery after a ceremony
a religious service and a ceremony outside the Agos office.

Dink’s murder shocked Turkey and Prime Minister Erdogan vowed
repeatedly that his killer would be caught.

Journalists and politicians in Turkey have expressed outrage at the
killing, which many described as a political assassination, while
the US, EU, France, and several human rights groups also voiced shock
and condemnation.

Dink had received multiple death threats from nationalists because
of his views on the mass killings of Armenians during the final days
of the Ottoman Empire.

He was convicted in October 2005 for writing about the Armenian
"genocide" in 1915, a claim denied by the authorities in Ankara.

The issue is a sensitive subject in both Armenia and Turkey. Many
Armenians have campaigned for the killings to be recognised
internationally as genocide.

Turkey admits that many Armenians were killed but it denies any
genocide, saying the deaths happened during widespread fighting in
World War I.

Tehran News 24 January 2007

ANKARA: ‘Hrant’s death united us’

New Anatolian, Turkey
Jan 24 2007

‘Hrant’s death united us’

Irazca Geray – The New Anatolian / Istanbul
24 January 2007

Font Size: default medium large

An unprecedented throng of thousands joined yesterday’s Istanbul
memorial procession honoring the memory of weekly Agos Editor in
Chief Hrant Dink and bidding the assassinated journalist farewell.

Starting in the early hours, tens of thousands of people walked in
groups to Osmanbey from all over the city to reach the offices of
Agos, Dink’s Turkish-Armenian paper, where the ceremony started at
11 a.m. with speeches delivered in the name of the editor’s family.

The body of the assassinated journalist was laid to rest at the
Balikli Armenian Cemetery.

The funeral was held on the fifth day after the prominent journalist of
Armenian descent was slain at the entrance of his newspaper’s office in
broad daylight on Friday. A 17-year-old suspect, who has been caught,
already confessed to the killing, while the general belief is that
he is only a pawn used to silence Dink, who was outspoken about the
mass killings of Armenians in the early 20th century and encouraged
reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia as well as fighting for the
freedom to express his thoughts. After ultranationalist layer Kemal
Kerincsiz filed a complaint against Dink for violating controversial
Turkish Penal Code (TCK) Article 301 on charges of insulting
"Turkishness," Dink started receiving an increasing amount of threats
both to his and his family’s life as he was seen as a target. Though
he could have left Turkey for a safer life in the West or Armenia,
he kept repeating that his roots were here and that he would not
leave his country. In his very last column, describing himself as a
dove constantly on the lookout for danger, Dink’s final words were,
"I know they don’t harm the doves in this country."

‘You left my embrace but not your country, my love’

In her speech called "Letter to the Lover," Hrant Dink’s widow Rakel
Dink said that the flood of love rushing to the newspaper has given
her and her family strength. "Today with a voice of silence, we are
seeing him off. Whether 17 or 27 years old, whoever the murdered is,
I know that they were once a baby. The environment that made a murder
out of a baby must be questioned."

Rakel Dink ended her words by saying, "What darkness can make me forget
your love? You left your loved ones, your friends, your children,
my embrace, but you did not leave your country, my love."

The long walk started following the announcement of Dink’s close friend
Aydin Engin, who coordinated the ceremony, saying, "Let’s walk in a
fashion that will show everyone what sort of a world we want."

The amazingly crowded group was made of people of all ages and walks
of life. Along with others the famous Armenian folk song "Sari Gelin,"
which is also popular in Turkey, was played from the loudspeakers
both in Armenian and in Turkish. Another song that again accompanied
the tears of many was "Firatin suyu."

‘We are all Hrant’

The group, which walked for about 8 kilometers from Sisli to Taksim and
then to Yenikapi, formed a procession behind a single banner that read,
"We are all Hrant, We are all Armenian." Individuals also carried signs
reading "Murderer 301" and "We are all Hrant." Besides the main street
between Sisli and Taksim, all side roads in Pangalti and Nisantasi were
packed with people as the main road couldn’t contain the crowd. On
the procession route, individuals leaning out of their balconies and
windows also showed support by clapping and throwing flowers.

Despite the request of Dink’s family and friends, who previously
announced that Dink wanted there to be no slogans during the ceremony,
various groups in the crowd shouted slogans like, "We’re all Hrant,
We’re all Armenian," "Shoulder to shoulder against fascism," "Murderer
301," "Murderer state will pay," "Long live the fellowship of peoples,"
"Either all of us or none, there’s no salvation alone." In an attempt
to respect Dink’s wish, many people clapped and shouted to silence
the slogans.

Reaching Agos’ office, whose door was covered in carnations, wreaths
and papers with odes to Hrant, many people again had difficulty holding
back their tears. Old women were heard chanting, "This is where they
brought our great man down."

Security and doves

There was intense security measures across town, included choppers
that circled above the procession at all times. In line with the
earlier statements of Istanbul Greater Municipality Mayor Muammer
Guler, all police leave was canceled and additional security forces
were requested from neighboring towns. Starting in the early hours,
the Yenikapi-Sarachane road as well as the transit from Sarachane to
Unkapani was closed to traffic. Unkapani Bridge was closed to traffic
in both directions. Vehicle entry to Taksim and also from Mecidiyekoy
to Sisli was banned. The route from Sisli to Yenikapi and the roads
around the Balikli Armenian Cemetery were closed to traffic in stages
as of 7:30 a.m., while the Osmanbey metro station was also closed.

By the time the procession reached Taksim Square, the main bus stop
here as well as the square were packed with police officers.

Ironically, the police were standing under a line of doves that
perched upon the electricity wires across the square.

At the Divan Hotel intersection in Elmadag, Dink’s family and the
hearse parted ways with the procession for the funeral ceremony at
the Meryem Ana Church, while the procession stopped and clapped,
waiting for Dink’s relatives to get on the buses. There were also
around 40 municipality buses arranged to take to Yenikapi the elderly
and those not able to walk further. Later the group continued its
walk towards Unkapani.

‘Death brought us together’

The funeral of Dink was the one of the largest public processions in
Turkish history, and perhaps the largest ever for a person lacking
an official title, as while the head of the crowd marching to the
cemetery reached Unkapani the end of the group was still in Taksim.

Thousands of people gathered to say farewell to Dink and reached
Yenikapi Iskele before 2 p.m.

Aydin Engin stated that they will stand to prevent others suffering
the same fate as Dink. "Hrant united us through his death," he said.

A women paying a last tribute to the journalist said, "We are Turks,
Kurds and Armenians and we want to live in peace together."

Despite earlier admonitions not to, the group chanted slogans in
front of a youth branch of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP).

Head of state missing

President Ahmet Necdet Sezer, Parliament Speaker Bulent Arinc and
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan were absent from the ceremony
due to scheduling conflicts. The government was represented by Deputy
Prime Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin and Interior Minister Abdulkadir Aksu.

Invited diaspora represented

For the funeral, the government invited moderate names of the Armenian
diaspora and the Yerevan government, with which it does not have
diplomatic relations with. In response Khajak Barsamian, the spiritual
leader of Armenians in America, came to Istanbul. Armenian Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian was also present at the ceremony.

Eight people from the Federation of Armenian Associations in France
also came to Turkey for the funeral.

The ceremony at the Meryem Ana Church that started at 2 p.m. and lasted
about 45 minutes was directed by Mesrob II, Armenian patriarch of
Turkey. Following the church ceremony Dink’s coffin met the procession
gathered at the Yenikapi Port Square, and the funeral was seen off
to the Balikli Armenian Cemetery.

ANKARA: MHP(Nationalist Movement Party) leader Bahceli talks harsh

MHP(Nationalist Movement Party) leader Bahceli talks harsh

Sabah, Turkey
Jan 24 2007

MHP leader Devlet Bahceli said it has become a seriously dangerous
habit to declare the state guilty after every single incident occur
in Turkey.

In a press conference he organized in his party building on Wednesday,
Bahceli told press that Turkey is being left with no defense against
domestic or foreign provocations by other countries who want it to
become a weak and problematic society.

Bahceli said he believes that the Dink murder was one of the scenarios
that aim political chaos.

Stating that lies have mixed up with truths in Turkey Bahceli said:
"This psychological pressure environment which is full of provocations
and accusations is being used for political marketing.

Emotional and humanly reactions are being exploited in order to
slander the national values and sensitivity of the Turkish nation.

Turkey is going through a dark period. Killing of an Armenian citizen
of this country has appalled Turkey. We have to admit that Turkey
must take necessary lessons from this vile murder.